Abstract

A comprehensive experiment was conducted at Phoenix, Arizona, involving the monitoring of full spectrum thermal radiation and those fractions of that flux that are contained within the 8‐ to 14‐μm and 10.5‐ to 12.5‐μm subrogions. Also monitored were surface air temperature (T0) and vapor pressure (e0). Analyses of the data established the source of water vapor associated thermal emittance (ϵ) variations of the cloudless sky as being due to the variable atmospheric concentration of water dimers—pairs of water molecules linked together by weak hydrogen bonds. New equations ((15)–(17)) based on this physical model were thus developed for the effective emittance of the atmosphere in both the 10.5‐ to 12.5‐µm and 8‐ to 14‐μm wavebands, as well as for the full thermal spectrum. Equation (17) was then shown to be a significant improvement over previous equations that have attempted to model this phenomenon.

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